Written by Rory
Based on some situations
originated by James Cameron.
She barely felt anything.
It was cold. There was no way
Rose couldn‘t feel that. The weight of ice in her hair, the sting of icy wind
on the very surface of her skin. But nothing penetrated.
The surrounding world moved
slowly, distantly. Like a dream. Voices echoed, and people smudged as they
shifted. The dull, stunned thud of her heart was in someone else’s chest, and
thoughts came only in convoluted passing.
How long had they all been drifting?
The waves rocked the lifeboat
beneath her gently, lullingly, somehow blasphemous after the violence of that
morning. The darkness was fading into the gray approach of dawn, but the stars
were still visible enough to hold her vague stare until her lids sagged shut
and all she could see was the green, glowing fire of a waving flare.
When she woke, the early sun
haloed an overdue ship looming above them. Her eyes trailed skyward, over the
name Carpathia and to the silhouettes of people lining the ship’s railing,
gawking down at the carnage the Titanic had left behind. Rose moved her gaze
eastward and saw the lifebelted officers straining to row the lifeboats closer,
closer to another waiting, scrambling group of their counterparts. She felt
diluted deliverance.
She watched, face blank and white
as the sinking moon, as the seamen began to help her fellow survivors up a rope
ladder dangling from the Carpathia’s gangway doors, from a vesicle of silence.
Heartache swaddled her tighter than the blankets around her.
When it came her turn to board
the ship, Rose struggled to stand, muscles seizing and body shaking. She took
her very first steps for the second time, and used strength she didn’t have to
climb the ladder she was cautiously guided to, the lifeboat swaying beneath her
feet with every advance.
When she reached the top, she
grabbed reaching hands with both her own, and then her feet found the stability
of the gangway. But with her very next step forward, her surroundings went
spinning and her body slack with savage infirmity.
Rose hardly felt herself falling,
nor the impact of the woman’s shoulder she collapsed against. She stood only
because she was held, and began walking forward again only because she was led.
Blankets appeared around her
shoulders, layer after layer, as if by magic, and when she was given a cup of
hot tea, Officer Lowe had to manually wrap her fingers around it. Its heat
barely touched her.
As she finally went to take a
seat on the deck, the air around her stank of desperation and tears. Women
begged for news of their husbands, their sons, and their brothers. Children
stared with hollow eyes too old for their innocent faces. They were all
connected now by the devastation. Stranger was not relevant. Class and rank,
for the moment, became the fickle thing that they were. As everyone came back
to themselves, they became their loss. Who would she be when she thawed?
Rose closed her eyes as noise and
light slowly began to touch her again, and she wondered how she had gotten
here. Just a few hours ago, if she went back just a few hours ago, Jack was
right there. He was there beside her in the suffocating cold, holding her hand.
She could feel his hand in hers. She could see their hot breath, like smoke,
intermingling in the dark. How could he be gone? How could it be that she was
never going to see him again?
A tear slipped gently from
beneath her lid and slowly traced down the contour of her cheek. If she just
went back a few hours, she would be with him again.
"Swim, Rose. I need you
to swim!" The burn of the cold water was like the burn of fire. The
crying, praying, moaning, shouting, and screaming of over a thousand became her
own thoughts. People clawed mindlessly at she and Jack as they swam, searching
for something, anything floating to get them out of the freezing water. The
sense of isolation, the sight of nothing but obsidian water, was overwhelming.
Jack wrapped his arms around
her waist and sang softly into her ear. "Come Josephine in my flying
machine, going up she goes, up she goes…"
Lying on her back, Rose stared
glassy-eyed up at the dark sky and felt peaceful, even though she knew she was
dying. Her breath was shallow, and her lips barely moved as she sang.
"Come Josephine, in my flying machine…"
Unity in their intertwined
bodies. His slick skin sliding against hers, both trembling in the back of a
Renault, bodies heavy and hot with pleasure.
The tinkling of ice on wood as
she broke their frozen hands apart. The cold that bit her lips when she kissed
his hand for the last time.
That fraction of a moment when
she’d given up, saw no reason to try, to live…
The sound of heavy boots on wood,
louder than any of the dim external noises around her, abruptly broke through
Rose’s reverie. Penetrated. She stiffened.
She would recognize the rhythm of
those footsteps anywhere.
"Sir, I don’t think you’ll
find any of your people down here. It’s all steerage."
Cal Hockley ignored the steward
that apprehended him as he came down the stairs and continued walking, taking
in one bleak face after another. He searched the faces of every person lining
the deck, looked under tattered shawls and blankets, hoping against hope to
find Rose. Be here, he thought. Please.
She couldn’t be dead.
The deck of the Carpathia was
crowded with huddled people, the recovered lifeboats of the Titanic, and a
massive pile of lifebelts that should have been bigger. Over all the tumult,
Rose felt each one of Cal’s footsteps reverberate through her body like
aftershocks from a bomb. Her senses were hyperaware of his every move, and when
she heard his swift intake of breath, she knew he had seen her. His footsteps
picked up their pace, but all she could do was sit there, rigid with dread as
he hurried towards her.
Relief swamped through Cal and
thought fled when his eyes finally fell upon the back of Rose’s head. He rushed
forward.
"Rose!" The word rang
with ‘Thank God!’
Cal, earnest, wrapped his hand
around Rose’s shoulder and stepped in front of her.
The face he was met with was not
Rose’s.
He stared dumbly at the
unfamiliar woman, struck silent and still by the startling return of his
wretchedness. He backed away from her gradually, trancelike, and continued his
search for Rose, heavy. Despondent with reality.
Not a few feet away, Rose remained
rooted, ignoring relief, wanting to disappear into the woodwork as she listened
to Cal walk a little further away, and then turn again, circling back towards
her. Don’t see me. Don’t see me.
As he passed her, she could feel
his shadow coast across her back.
What would have happened had it
been her he grabbed? With everything that had happened, would everything be
forgiven? Would the whole thing be chalked up to cold feet, and go on as if
Rose had never created a hitch in their plans? Would she become the fated good
little society wife?
The moment her eyes snapped open,
she realized she was going to fight to live.
As the sound of his footsteps
became distant, Rose dared to turn around and watch her old life walk away.
Later, at nine PM on April 18,
1912, as the Carpathia docked in New York, Rose and the rest of the Titanic’s
refugees disembarked and stood on solid ground for the first time in eternity.
Rose lingered on the dock, staring up at the Statue of Liberty, welcoming
everyone home with her steadfast majesty. She’d been an undisputed symbol of
freedom for many who’d laid eyes upon her. Rose had not expected to be one of
them. She’d been brought home in chains, but their they lay broken at Lady
Liberty’s feet.
She stood there staring for a
long time, even as friends, relatives, the press, officers, and ambulances
swarmed the dock, and then it began to rain, and she was soaked. She’d been
wetter.
So many people came to this
country hoping for a new life. So many on the Titanic that she’d known, people
she’d danced with and laughed with, were never going to get that chance now.
She and Jack would never get that chance.
Could she do it alone?
As if prompted by the universe,
an officer with a clipboard and an umbrella approached her. "Can I take
your name, please, love?"
Rose looked at him. Destiny was
waiting for her answer.
Could she?
"Dawson. Rose Dawson."
Why couldn’t she become a woman
that stood tall on her own, like Lady Liberty?
Why not?
Eighty-four years later, old Rose
sat in her wheelchair before a crowd of seamen and her granddaughter, sharing
her story, sharing Jack, for the very first time. Everything he’d done that
morning had been in order to deliver her here. She looked down at the jade
butterfly hair comb--her favorite as a girl--clutched in her aged hands. That
it had been one of the few things recovered from the wreckage seemed very
fitting to her. It was like it’d been waiting to return to her all these years,
at this very moment. Tracing its wings with a gentle finger, Rose smiled as she
remembered how she’d always felt an unidentifiable yearning whenever she’d
looked at it.
Rose looked at the listeners
before her, her eyes bright with wisdom and memories. "Can you exchange
one life for another? A caterpillar turns into a butterfly. If a mindless
insect can do it, why couldn’t I? Was it anymore unimaginable than the sinking
of the Titanic?"
She looked back down at the comb,
and it was like looking through a time tunnel, at that girl standing on a dock
so very long ago, at the woman she had hardly dared to imagine becoming.
The End.